Literary usage of Examinable

Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:

1.The Encyclopædia of Pleading and Practice by William Mark McKinney, Thomas Johnson Michie (1896)"Collateral Hatters not examinable.— It is in keeping with the strict pursuance
of the proceedings that no collateral questions, or questions involving the ..."

2.Diary and Correspondence of Samuel Pepys, F.R.S.: Secretary to the by Samuel Pepys, Richard Griffin Braybrooke (1855)"... arc few to the Commons' House, and those not examinable by them, but only by
the House of Lords. Thence with my Lord Brouncker to Gresham College, ..."

3.Outline of the Jurisdiction and Procedure of the Federal Courts by Joseph Ragland Long (1917)"Claimants before master examinable by him. The master shall be at liberty to
examine any creditor or other person coming in to claim before him, ..."

4.Life of Adam Smith by John Rae (1895)"The lists mentioned in the note are the lists of what are called examinable
persons—that is, of persons upwards of seven or eight years of age, ..."

5.The Quarterly Law Journal by A. B. Guigon (1857)"RECENT ENGLISH CASES. sons or grounds thereof, they are examinable for the purpose
of ascertaining whether there is error in the judgment. ..."

6.The Encyclopædia of Pleading and Practice by William Mark McKinney, Thomas Johnson Michie (1896)"Collateral Hatters not examinable.— It is in keeping with the strict pursuance
of the proceedings that no collateral questions, or questions involving the ..."

7.Diary and Correspondence of Samuel Pepys, F.R.S.: Secretary to the by Samuel Pepys, Richard Griffin Braybrooke (1855)"... arc few to the Commons' House, and those not examinable by them, but only by
the House of Lords. Thence with my Lord Brouncker to Gresham College, ..."

8.Outline of the Jurisdiction and Procedure of the Federal Courts by Joseph Ragland Long (1917)"Claimants before master examinable by him. The master shall be at liberty to
examine any creditor or other person coming in to claim before him, ..."

9.Life of Adam Smith by John Rae (1895)"The lists mentioned in the note are the lists of what are called examinable
persons—that is, of persons upwards of seven or eight years of age, ..."

10.The Quarterly Law Journal by A. B. Guigon (1857)"RECENT ENGLISH CASES. sons or grounds thereof, they are examinable for the purpose
of ascertaining whether there is error in the judgment. ..."